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Presented by Ashok Sahu

Achieving All the Time, Everywhere Access in Next-Generation Mobile Networks by Marcello Cinque, Domenico Cotroneo and Stefano Russo. Presented by Ashok Sahu. Goal.

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Presented by Ashok Sahu

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  1. Achieving All the Time, Everywhere Access in Next-Generation Mobile Networks by Marcello Cinque, Domenico Cotroneo and Stefano Russo Presented by Ashok Sahu

  2. Goal • To leverage the availability of wireless connection thus providing the “All the time, Everywhere access” view of pervasive computing.

  3. How? • Leveraging communication availability - by providing general and extensible vertical handoff schemes. • Providing applications with a connection awareness support.

  4. Paper’s Contribution • A Novel Mobility Management architecture for NGMN (Next Generation Mobile Networks) that consists of • Last Second Soft Handoff (LSSH) • Nomadic Computing SOCKetS (NCSOCKS)- Connection aware transport layer API

  5. What is a Handoff? • The process of transferring an ongoing call or data session from one channel connected to the core network to another.

  6. Types of handoffs • Reactive and Proactive handoff schemes. • Hard handoff and soft handoff. • Vertical and horizontal handoff. Author’s approach :- Proactive handoff based on Receiver Signal Strength Indicator (RSSI) , a combination of Hard and soft handoff Vertical handoff

  7. Proposed handoff scheme • It consists of three phases • Initiation: the network status is monitored to decide when to start a migration • Decision: Once the need to handoff is triggered a new AP has to be selected. • Execution: the connection to the selected AP is established.

  8. Primary focus • Primary focus is on minimizing unavailability periods assuming that mobile device is in a zone covered by Access points (APs). • Unavailability can be caused by two kinds of events i) handoff occurrence ii) cell overload during handoff • Event i) does not occur if a soft handoff scheme is adopted. For this reason, soft handoff scheme has been chosen.

  9. Formula • The define availability as where Pr(H) is the probability that a handoff occurs and Pr(O) is the probability that the AP is overloaded. • Pr(O) has been farther defined as where Nap is the number of Access points, C is the maximum average number of connections that can be handled by APs. N is the total number of admitted connections. • N can be further defined as where Nc is the number of simultaneous connections required and U is the number of Mobile devices MDs

  10. Initiation Phase • They noted that its crucial to discriminate between transient signal degradations from permanent ones. • Due to this they do not follow an initiation based on fixed RSSI value. They argue that initiation based on fixed RSSI value leads to a poor availability due to transient RSSI degradations. They experimentally confirm this. • The probability of handoff occurrence in case of simple fixed threshold mechanism is Pr(H) = Pr(RSSI< Srssi). • They follow an α-count mechanism instead.

  11. α-count Mechanism for handoff initiation • α-count function is a count and threshold mechanism. It takes the L-th measured RSSI as the input than it is incremented by 1 if current RSSI is less then threshold. It is decremented by dec if current RSSI is greater that threshold. • Handoff is triggered if the degradation becomes permanent i.e. α-count reaches a threshold α-T

  12. Experimental proof for α-count behaviour

  13. Decision phase • The decision algorithm considers only neighboring APs. • To APs are neighbors if their distance d is less than a certain value dmax • The decision if taken based on score criteria. • Applications can easily specify their requirements via NCSOCKS API. • AP topology is provided by a specialized component, the Map Server.

  14. Proposed Architecture • The major components are • Connection and Location Manager (CLM) • Nomadic Computing Sockets • Map Server • The first two components run on the device-side platform whereas the third is deployed on the core network.

  15. Connection and Location Manager (CLM) • CLM is in charge of handling connections with the APs. • It handles vertical and horizontal handoffs using proposed LSSH scheme • α-count parameters and score function weights are set by applications via NCSOCKS API. • CLM also manages information about the current location of the mobile device. • It is designed according to interface based approach, so as to handle all the wireless channels through the same interface, which provides several common operations as searching APs, creating/destroying connections, building an IP interface upon the wireless media and getting current RSSI, delay, bandwidth and cost values.

  16. Map Server Responsibilities • Responsible for accepting map requests from MD’s CLM. • Map server has to recognize topology changes and provide last updated information to MD’s • To avoid bottle neck APs have been grouped and there is a Map server for each cluster. • Clusters should be set up taking into account the physical topology.

  17. Achieving connection awareness: the NCSOCKS • NCSOCKS use both IP communication facilities and information gathered from data link layer, through the CLM. • Information flows from/to the application to/from the CLM, via the NCSOCKS interface. • Applications can set there QOS requirements and can request current connection status. • The current symbolic location, the wireless technology and the cost are provided by the Map Server, knowing which AP is currently being used.

  18. CLM and NCSOCKS class diagram

  19. Testbed description

  20. Pr(H) with different schemes

  21. Pr(O) estimation with different handoff schemes

  22. Conclusion • Experimental results have demonstrated that the proposed handoff scheme reduces unavailability periods, due to transient signal degradations and AP overloads, significantly. • I think it’s a useful contribution but there might be better ways. • Might suffer from Map server update problem. • Session layer approach might be better.

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